Why does NSBShadow delete public comments ???
- Posted in the New Smyrna Beach Forum
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Joined: Jul 24, 2008
Comments: 407
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Im not sure, but I have my ideas. Feel free to post your deleted comments here so that others can read them. I feel both sides of the story need to be heard and if they cant stand the heat (as my mama use to say) they need to get out of the kitchen !!! Some of the comments are not negaive, they just delete them because "they can" Hmmm, does someone have control issues???
I will start with the latest post that I noticed was deleted. Please feel free to follow suit. |
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Joined: Jul 24, 2008
Comments: 407
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But auditors have discovered Vaden registered the company Web site while he worked for the utility.Without formal approval from the utility board, Vaden signed a contract with V-Star to provide telemarketing and recruit customers for the utility's new in-house phone company. A few weeks later, former telecom director Turano learned checks for V-Star were being sent to the home address of Teri Vaden in North Carolina. She asked her boss about it, and Vaden said Teri Vaden was his sister-in-law and an employee of V-Star."He (Ron Vaden) also stated that he had no ownership or ties to V-Star," Turano wrote to auditors. Six months later, Turano learned a utility employee was taking V-Star checks to a local bank, depositing them and sending the receipts to Teri Vaden. That month, August 2005, Turano announced her resignation, effective the following April, because she could "no longer work in this type of environment," she says she told her boss.A month later, in September 2004, Vaden abruptly resigned after city commissioners began asking questions about the telecom business. A gloomy picture began to emerge. Instead of being flush with cash, the division had lost $1.1 million.That's when outside auditors began looking into the mess, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement began to investigate.
A few weeks later, former telecom director Turano learned checks for V-Star were being sent to the home address of Teri Vaden in North Carolina. She asked her boss about it, and Vaden said Teri Vaden was his sister-in-law and an employee of V-Star."He (Ron Vaden) also stated that he had no ownership or ties to V-Star," Turano wrote to auditors. Six months later, Turano learned a utility employee was taking V-Star checks to a local bank, depositing them and sending the receipts to Teri Vaden. That month, August 2005, Turano announced her resignation, effective the following April, because she could "no longer work in this type of environment," she says she told her boss.A month later, in September 2004, Vaden abruptly resigned after city commissioners began asking questions about the telecom business. A gloomy picture began to emerge. Instead of being flush with cash, the division had lost $1.1 million.That's when outside auditors began looking into the mess, and the |
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Joined: Jul 24, 2008
Comments: 407
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Florida Department of Law Enforcement began to investigate. The auditors questioned Vaden early on about his involvement with V-Star. He "emphatically denied to our firm that he had any connection with, or knowledge of, any of the principal stockholders and officers of V-Star," the auditors wrote.
Thursday, 7/24/08, 7:33 PM By dissecting the coding on V-Star's Web site, NCVSTAR.com , the auditors discovered the domain name was registered to Ron Vaden, using his e-mail address at the utility and his home address in New Smyrna Beach, according to the auditor's report. The domain was created on Sept. 26, 2002, while Vaden was director of the utility and 16 months before he signed the V-Star contract, the auditors report says. Vaden, who still attends utility board meetings as a member of the public, has called the accusations "a bunch of garbage."The employee who deposited checks for V-Star, Richard Paczkowski, former utility manager of agent sales, also denied involvement with V-Star. He told the auditors he deposited the checks "solely to enhance the Commission's customer service capabilities," according to the auditors.But then travel records showed the utility paid for him to travel three times to North Carolina for V-Star "sales marketing" trips. Afterward, Paczkowski "confirmed to us that he did in fact have some personal involvement with V-Star, and that he was paid for providing professional services" to the company while also on the utility's payroll, the auditors wrote. If true, Vaden's and Paczkowski's ties to V-Star would violate the utility's personnel and ethics policies. And Paczkowski's travel reimbursement may have been "unlawful," the auditors wrote.Yet, the allegations and fallout were not over.Turano, the telecom director, decided not to resign when Vaden stepped down and she took over as utility director. She also denied involvement with V-Star, according to the auditors |
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The coding changes "may potentially indicate the existence of formal intent to defraud the Commission with the diversion of sales commission funds from the rightful owner of the customer accounts."Two other top officials lost their jobs over V-Star.
Last year, e-mails were found that showed the director of telecommunications and the director of information technology may have been involved in a "potential conspiracy" to "intentionally obscure the ability to track the potentially unlawful alteration of the Commission's telecommunications customer database files," the auditors wrote. Former telecommunications director Rob Hunter and information technology director Craig Crawford deny the charges and say they were trying to fix the fraudulent coding. Crawford, in a speech to the utility board, also said it is absurd to think Paczkowski was a key player in "the criminal masterminding of the entire telecommunications cover-up." A few weeks ago, the utility board voted to abandon its phone business.Ironically, auditors question whether the utility and City Commission had the authority to approve the telecom businesses in the first place, and provide service to customers outside the city limits of New Smyrna Beach. The auditors say they're not attorneys, but it appears the grand telecom plan should have been put to voters in a referendum. |
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Vaden, who still attends utility board meetings as a member of the public, has called the accusations "a bunch of garbage."The employee who deposited checks for V-Star, Richard Paczkowski, former utility manager of agent sales, also denied involvement with V-Star. He told the auditors he deposited the checks "solely to enhance the Commission's customer service capabilities," according to the auditors.But then travel records showed the utility paid for him to travel three times to North Carolina for V-Star "sales marketing" trips.
Afterward, Paczkowski "confirmed to us that he did in fact have some personal involvement with V-Star, and that he was paid for providing professional services" to the company while also on the utility's payroll, the auditors wrote. If true, Vaden's and Paczkowski's ties to V-Star would violate the utility's personnel and ethics policies. And Paczkowski's travel reimbursement may have been "unlawful," the auditors wrote.Yet, the allegations and fallout were not over.Turano, the telecom director, decided not to resign when Vaden stepped down and she took over as utility director. She also denied involvement with V-Star, according to the auditors. But last year, auditors discovered e-mails showing she ordered her staff to change the coding on 4,964 customer accounts to show they were recruited by V-Star, when, in fact, V-Star didn't sign them up and didn't deserve commissions for them, according to the auditor's report. The accounts belonged to the utility.Initially, Turano acknowledged she asked for coding changes on 2,000 accounts, but only because Vaden requested it, she told the utility board last summer. She said she had no reason to doubt it wasn't part of an agreement with V-Star. But then the auditors found another 2,964 accounts had been changed.By monkeying with the customer database, the utility "effectively paid both telemarketing solicitation fees and residual sales agency commissions to both parties (RSVP and V-Star, respectively) for solicitation of the same telecommunications customers," the auditors wrote. |
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Yet, the most shocking allegations were yet to come.In 2004, the utility paid $406,000 to a North Carolina company, called V-Star, whose ownership remains a mystery.
But auditors have discovered Vaden registered the company Web site while he worked for the utility.Without formal approval from the utility board, Vaden signed a contract with V-Star to provide telemarketing and recruit customers for the utility's new in-house phone company. A few weeks later, former telecom director Turano learned checks for V-Star were being sent to the home address of Teri Vaden in North Carolina. She asked her boss about it, and Vaden said Teri Vaden was his sister-in-law and an employee of V-Star."He (Ron Vaden) also stated that he had no ownership or ties to V-Star," Turano wrote to auditors. Six months later, Turano learned a utility employee was taking V-Star checks to a local bank, depositing them and sending the receipts to Teri Vaden. That month, August 2005, Turano announced her resignation, effective the following April, because she could "no longer work in this type of environment," she says she told her boss.A month later, in September 2004, Vaden abruptly resigned after city commissioners began asking questions about the telecom business. A gloomy picture began to emerge. Instead of being flush with cash, the division had lost $1.1 million.That's when outside auditors began looking into the mess, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement began to investigate. The auditors questioned Vaden early on about his involvement with V-Star. He "emphatically denied to our firm that he had any connection with, or knowledge of, any of the principal stockholders and officers of V-Star," the auditors wrote. By dissecting the coding on V-Star's Web site, NCVSTAR.com , the auditors discovered the domain name was registered to Ron Vaden, using his e-mail address at the utility and his home address in New Smyrna Beach, according to the auditor's report. The domain was created on Sept. 26, 2002, while Vaden was director of the utility and 16 months before he signed the V-Star contract, the auditors report says. |
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It wasn't long before Genny Turano, former utility telecom director, heard Vaden was acting as a consultant for Epicus and "helping (CEO) Mark (Richards) run the business," she wrote in the auditors report.Utility regulations prohibit employees from working for companies that do business with the utility.
As head of the telecom division, Turano typically worked closely with outside vendors. But on the Epicus contract, her boss Vaden worked directly with CEO Richards."I was left out of the loop," Turano wrote.The CEO asked Vaden twice to provide $200,000 deposits on behalf of the utility. Vaden authorized the $400,000, without seeking approval from the utility board, according to the auditors. Only $40,000 of the deposit was repaid before Epicus filed for bankruptcy. While Epicus was in default on repaying the deposits, Vaden told his staff to pay an additional $612,500 to Epicus for telemarketing solicitations to add customers to Epicus on behalf of the utility. These arrangements violated utility policies, which require competitive bids on contracts and approval from the utility board on payments greater than $25,000, the auditors say.The utility requires bids and contracts for any business dealing involving more than $500. But next, Vaden entered "an unwritten oral business arrangement" with a Canadian company, called RSVP Customer Care Centres, for telemarketers to sign up customers. The company received $2.3 million in 2003 and 2004, although for seven months of the time, the company signed up customers for Epicus and the utility received nothing in return, according to the auditor.These dealings were "potentially unlawful," involved "potential acts of malfeasance" and violated utility policies, the auditors wrote. |
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Reflecting back, City Commissioner Jim Hathaway said Vaden apparently was not informing the utility board of his actions, and the board's five members should have questioned him more. The City Commission, which appoints members to the utility board and has ultimate oversight of the utility, also was kept in the dark.
"The City Commission was, I guess, misled on the phone business," Hathaway said.City Mayor Jim Vandergrifft sees it differently. The mayor, supporting Vaden in the past, said the mess may simply be a business plan gone bad."I would never blame anyone unless there's facts to back it up," the mayor said, noting the city is awaiting the results of the FDLE investigation. Vaden and other former utility officials deny involvement in criminal activities, although some have acknowledged the utility may have been mismanaged. Auditors Brent Millikan & Co. said in a stinging report last month that the problems appear to go far beyond mismanagement. The report is filled with phrases like "potentially unlawful" and "potential criminal acts." The most serious allegations involve the utility's dealings with three companies: One that provided phone and Internet service, and two telemarketing companies that recruited customers. Here is the story that emerges from their report.In 2001, the utility started selling phone and Internet service for a Lake Mary company, called Epicus, and in return received a cut of sales. |
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However, reports from outside auditors tell a shocking story: Taxpayers footing the bill to recruit customers for a private company. The utility director creating a Web site for a company doing business with the utility. Staffers manipulating thousands of customer accounts to pay commissions to that company, even though it didn't earn them. Utility officials lying about their involvement and a potential conspiracy to cover up the deeds.
It all started in 2001 as a plan for the utility to expand its services from selling electric, water and sewer service to adding phone service. Utility officials said it would be an easy way to make extra money, which could help them lower bills for local ratepayers. Initially, the utility signed up phone and Internet customers for a private company. Over the next few years, the utility teamed up with more businesses to recruit customers throughout Florida and five Southern states. "We were given all these wonderful reports of how this would be making all this money," said New Smyrna Beach City Commissioner Lynne Plaskett, whose husband works as an electric lineman for the utility. At first, few questioned Utilities Commission Director Ron Vaden, who started in 1987 as an electrical engineer making $25,000 a year and moved up to the $160,000-a-year top job. The utility's governing board members generally deferred to his expertise. Their monthly meetings often lasted just 15 minutes in the middle of the day. |
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NEW SMYRNA BEACH -- Fraud, lies and cover-up are not allegations you'd expect to hear in this charming seaside town, especially involving the mundane city agency that provides electric, water and sewer service.
But in the past year and a half, a scandal has been unfolding, involving millions of dollars of taxpayer money from the utility's sale of phone and Internet service. The result has been jolting --$7.3 million in losses at the utility, a Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigation and five top utility officials out of jobs. What went wrong and who's to blame isn't entirely clear. FDLE recently finished a year-long criminal investigation, but the findings are confidential until prosecutors decide whether to file charges. |
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Joined: Jun 20, 2007
Comments: 491
New Smyrna Beach
ISP Location:
Edgewater, FL
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Didn't know the Shadow edited posts. Other than the time I asked after accidently posting my email address.
Haven't been there in months. A little juvenile. Not that this is much better. A few things get deleted here, mostly because of language. Otherwise, post to your heart's content. |
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Joined: Jul 24, 2008
Comments: 407
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Anything that contradicts what they choose to let the public know is deleted. I made two posts yesterday regarding the Utilities Commission, and when I went back to the site last night, there were probably 40-50 posts deleted and numberous posts asking why, those were soon deleted also.
Interestly enough, if you look at their ABOUT page, it is stated there that posts are not deleted unless they contain vulgarity, etc. I guess contradiction is vulgarity. Although I didn't agree with all of the parodys and such on the home page, I gave the site kudo when I beleived they let the public speak freely. |
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An Interesting Read that was deleted from the site is here:
http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/ac... +(pre-1997+Fulltext)&editi on=&startpage=c.01&des c=Labor+Dept.+Trying+to+Oust+A dministrative+Law+Judge%3B+Nah um+Litt+Accused+of+Abusing+Pow ers+of+Office And Another http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/ac... I find it interesting that one of the accusations in the Labor Dept claim against Litt is that he chose to take cases in Alaska. If you search the internet for Natum Litt, you will also see that he was a huge advocate for Alaska oil drilling. How convenient that he got an all expenses paid trip to Alaska to work on his own personal agenda. |
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Joined: Jun 20, 2007
Comments: 491
New Smyrna Beach
ISP Location:
Edgewater, FL
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What I remember about the Shadow page was a lot of noise. Some posts amounted to no more than scrolling the page, repeating the same thing many times. Even when I agree with someone, there comes a point at which it is noise.
As for the utility commission, I'll wait for indictments. They have been scrutinized inside and out and if there is something to all the accusations I have heard... it will come out. This is a small city with all the budget problems of most small cities in Florida and shouldn't be footing the bill for any trips outside the state. Oh, and may I add here, "I have no involvement with V-star or RSVP." Also, found this on the Shadow on Hometown News: http://www.myhometownnews.net/index.php... |
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